Collection of Information; Proposed Extension of Approval; Comment Request-Follow-Up Activities for Product-Related Injuries, 62753-62754 [E9-28661]
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Federal Register / Vol. 229, No. 74 / Tuesday, December 1, 2009 / Notices
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sauntia
S. Warfield, 202–418–5084.
Sauntia S. Warfield,
Assistant Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. E9–28842 Filed 11–27–09; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 6351–01–P
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
Collection of Information; Proposed
Extension of Approval; Comment
Request—Follow-Up Activities for
Product-Related Injuries
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: As required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)(44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35), the Consumer Product
Safety Commission requests comments
on a proposed extension of approval of
a collection of information from persons
who have been involved in or have
witnessed incidents associated with
consumer products. The Commission
will consider all comments received in
response to this notice before requesting
an extension of approval of this
collection of information from the Office
of Management and Budget.
DATES: The Office of the Secretary must
receive comments not later than
February 1, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should
be captioned ‘‘Product-Related Injuries’’
and e-mailed to the Office of the
Secretary at cpsc-os@cpsc.gov or mailed
to Office of the Secretary, Consumer
Product Safety Commission, 4330 East
West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814.
Written comments may also be sent to
the Office of the Secretary by facsimile
at (301) 504–0127.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Copies of this request for extension of
the information collection requirements
and supporting documentation are
available from Linda Glatz, Division of
Policy and Planning, Office of
Information Technology and
Technology Services, Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814;
telephone: (301) 504–7671 or by e-mail
to lglatz@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
Section 5(a) of the Consumer Product
Safety Act, 15 U.S.C. 2054(a), requires
the Commission to collect information
related to the causes and prevention of
death, injury, and illness associated
with consumer products. That section
VerDate Nov<24>2008
20:14 Nov 30, 2009
Jkt 220001
also requires the Commission to
conduct continuing studies and
investigations of deaths, injuries,
diseases, other health impairments, and
economic losses resulting from
accidents involving consumer products.
The Commission obtains information
about product-related deaths, injuries,
and illnesses from a variety of sources,
including newspapers, death
certificates, consumer complaints, and
medical facilities. In addition, the
Commission receives information
through its Internet Web site through
forms reporting on product-related
injuries or incidents.
From these sources, the Commission
staff selects cases of interest for further
investigation by face-to-face or
telephone interviews with persons who
witnessed or were injured in incidents
involving consumer products. On-site
investigations are usually made in cases
where the Commission staff needs
photographs of the incident site, the
product involved, or detailed
information about the incident. This
information can come from face-to-face
interviews with persons who were
injured or who witnessed the incident,
as well as contact with state and local
officials, including police, coroners and
fire investigators, and others with
knowledge of the incident.
The Commission uses this
information to support development
and improvement of voluntary
standards, rulemaking proceedings,
information and education campaigns,
and administrative and judicial
proceedings for enforcement of the
statutes, standards, and regulations
administered by the Commission. These
safety efforts are vitally important to
help make consumer products safer and
to remove unsafe products from the
channels of distribution and from
consumers’ homes.
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) approved the collection of
information concerning product-related
injuries under control number 3041–
0029. OMB’s most recent extension of
approval will expire on January 31,
2009. The Commission now proposes to
request an extension of approval of this
collection of information.
The Commission also operates a
surveillance system known as the
National Electronic Injury Surveillance
System (NEISS) that provides timely
data on consumer product-related
injuries treated in a statistically valid
sample from approximately 100 hospital
emergency departments, as well as
childhood poisonings in the U.S. The
NEISS system has been in operation
since 1971. The Commission previously
has not included NEISS reports under
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
62753
the product-related injuries collection of
information because the information
obtained from hospital databases are
obtained directly through CPSC
employees and/or CPSC contractors,
and does not involve the solicitation of
any information from any individuals.
The CPSC employee or contractor
collects emergency department records
for review which are then coded. The
PRA exempts facts or opinions obtained
through direct observation by an
employee or agent of the sponsoring
agency. 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(3). However,
because in addition to the reports
themselves, further information may
need to be obtained which may result in
telephone and/or face-to-face
communications with individuals, the
proposed collection of information
under the follow-up activities for
product-related injuries now includes
the burden hours per year for the NEISS
system in addition to the other followup activities conducted by the
Commission.
B. Estimated Burden
The NEISS system collects
information on consumer-product
related injuries from approximately 100
hospitals in the United States.
Respondents to NEISS include hospitals
that directly report information to
NEISS, and hospitals that allow access
to a CPSC contractor who collects the
data. In FY2008, there were 157 NEISS
respondents (total hospitals and CPSC
contractors). These NEISS respondents
reviewed an estimated 3.4 million
emergency department records and
reported 371,507 consumer productrelated injuries and 5,030 childhood
poisoning-related injuries. Based on
FY2008 data, the total burden hours to
respondents are estimated to be 41,497
hours. The average burden hour per
hospital is 415 hours. However, the total
burden hour on each hospital varies by
the size (small or large) and location
(rural or metropolitan) of the hospital.
The smallest hospital reported less than
200 cases with a burden of
approximately 100 hours, while the
largest hospital reported over 16,000
cases with a burden of about 1,300
hours.
The total costs to NEISS respondents
based on FY2008 data are estimated to
be $1.5 million per year. NEISS
respondents enter into contracts with
CPSC and are compensated for these
costs. The average cost per respondent
is estimated to be about $15,000. The
average cost per burden hour is
estimated to be $36 per hour (including
wages and overhead) (Bureau of Labor
Statistics, June 2009, Total
Compensation Civilian workers,
E:\FR\FM\01DEN1.SGM
01DEN1
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
62754
Federal Register / Vol. 229, No. 74 / Tuesday, December 1, 2009 / Notices
Hospitals). However, the actual cost to
each respondent varies due to the type
of respondent (hospital versus CPSC
contractor), size of hospital, and
regional differences in wages and
overhead. Therefore, the actual annual
cost for any given respondent may vary
between $2,600 at a small rural hospital
and $75,000 at a large metropolitan
hospital which are compensated by the
CPSC.
The Commission staff also obtains
information about incidents involving
consumer products from approximately
17,415 persons annually. The staff
conducts face-to-face interviews at
incident sites with approximately 915
persons each year. On average, an onsite interview takes approximately 5
hours. The staff will also conduct
approximately 3,500 in-depth
investigations by telephone. Each indepth telephone investigation requires
approximately 20 minutes.
Additionally, the Commission’s hotline
staff interviews approximately 4,000
persons each year about incidents
involving selected consumer products.
These interviews take an average of 10
minutes each. Each year, the
Commission also receives information
from about 9,000 persons who complete
forms requesting information about
product-related incidents or injuries.
These forms appear on the
Commission’s Internet Web site,
http:www.cpsc.gov, and are printed in
the Consumer Product Safety Review
and other Commission publications.
The staff estimates that completion of a
form takes about 12 minutes.
The Commission staff estimates that
this collection of information imposes a
total annual burden of 7,724 hours on
all respondents: 4,118 hours for face-toface interviews; 1,155 hours for in-depth
telephone interviews; 661 hours for
responses to Hotline interviews; and
1,790 hours for completion of written
forms.
The Commission staff estimates the
value of the time of respondents to this
collection of information at $29.31 per
hour (Bureau of Labor Statistics, June
2009, Total Compensation, All workers).
At this valuation, the estimated annual
cost to the public of this information
collection will be approximately
$226,390.
The annual cost to the Federal
government for this collection of
information is estimated to be
approximately $6.4 million per year.
This estimate includes $1.5 million in
compensation to NEISS respondents.
The estimate also includes
approximately $4.9 million for 354
professional staff months to oversee
NEISS operation, prepare
VerDate Nov<24>2008
20:14 Nov 30, 2009
Jkt 220001
questionnaires, interviewer guidelines,
and other instruments and instructions
used to collect the information, conduct
face-to-face and telephone interviews;
and evaluate responses obtained from
interviews and completed forms. Each
staff month is estimated to cost the
Commission approximately $13,859.
This is based on an average wage rate of
$55.97 (the equivalent of a GS–14 Step
5 employee) with an addition 30 percent
added for benefits (Bureau of Labor
Statistics, June 2009, percentage total
benefits for all civilian management,
professional, and related employees).
C. Request for Comments
The Commission solicits written
comments from all interested persons
about the proposed collection of
information. The Commission
specifically solicits information relevant
to the following topics:
• Whether the collection of
information described above is
necessary for the proper performance of
the Commission’s functions, including
whether the information would have
practical utility;
• Whether the estimated burden of
the proposed collection of information
is accurate;
• Whether the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be collected
could be enhanced; and
• Whether the burden imposed by the
collection of information could be
minimized by use of automated,
electronic or other technological
collection techniques, or other forms of
information technology.
Dated: November 24, 2009.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. E9–28661 Filed 11–30–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Todd A. Stevenson, Office of the
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814, (301)
504–7923.
Dated: November 24, 2009.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–28663 Filed 11–30–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–M
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meetings
TIME AND DATE: Wednesday, December 2,
2009, 9 a.m.—12 noon.
PLACE: Hearing Room 420, Bethesda
Towers, 4330 East West Highway,
Bethesda, Maryland.
STATUS: Commission Briefing/Meeting—
Open to the Public.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED:
1. Interim Enforcement Policy on
Component Testing and Certification (of
Lead Paint and Content).
2. Commission Action on Existing
Stay of Testing and Certification.
3. Notice of Inquiry for Tracking
Labels for Drywall.
A live Webcast of the Meeting can be
viewed at https://www.cpsc.gov/webcast/
index.html.
For a recorded message containing the
latest agenda information, call (301)
504–7948.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Todd A. Stevenson, Office of the
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814, (301)
504–7923.
Dated: November 24, 2009.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–28662 Filed 11–30–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–M
Sunshine Act Meetings
TIME AND DATE: Wednesday, December 2,
2009, 2–4 p.m.
PLACE: Hearing Room 420, Bethesda
Towers, 4330 East West Highway,
Bethesda, Maryland.
STATUS: Closed to the Public.
MATTER TO BE CONSIDERED:
Compliance Weekly Report—
Commission Briefing
The staff will brief the Commission on
various compliance matters. For a
recorded message containing the latest
agenda information, call (301) 504–
7948.
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Office of the Secretary
[Transmittal Nos. 09–60 and 09–73]
36(b)(1) Arms Sales Notifications
AGENCY: Defense Security Cooperation
Agency, DoD.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: The Department of Defense is
publishing the unclassified text of two
section 36(b)(1) arms sales notifications.
They are published to fulfill the
E:\FR\FM\01DEN1.SGM
01DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 229 (Tuesday, December 1, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 62753-62754]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-28661]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
Collection of Information; Proposed Extension of Approval;
Comment Request--Follow-Up Activities for Product-Related Injuries
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: As required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)(44
U.S.C. Chapter 35), the Consumer Product Safety Commission requests
comments on a proposed extension of approval of a collection of
information from persons who have been involved in or have witnessed
incidents associated with consumer products. The Commission will
consider all comments received in response to this notice before
requesting an extension of approval of this collection of information
from the Office of Management and Budget.
DATES: The Office of the Secretary must receive comments not later than
February 1, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should be captioned ``Product-Related
Injuries'' and e-mailed to the Office of the Secretary at cpsc-os@cpsc.gov or mailed to Office of the Secretary, Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814. Written
comments may also be sent to the Office of the Secretary by facsimile
at (301) 504-0127.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Copies of this request for extension
of the information collection requirements and supporting documentation
are available from Linda Glatz, Division of Policy and Planning, Office
of Information Technology and Technology Services, Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814;
telephone: (301) 504-7671 or by e-mail to lglatz@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
Section 5(a) of the Consumer Product Safety Act, 15 U.S.C. 2054(a),
requires the Commission to collect information related to the causes
and prevention of death, injury, and illness associated with consumer
products. That section also requires the Commission to conduct
continuing studies and investigations of deaths, injuries, diseases,
other health impairments, and economic losses resulting from accidents
involving consumer products. The Commission obtains information about
product-related deaths, injuries, and illnesses from a variety of
sources, including newspapers, death certificates, consumer complaints,
and medical facilities. In addition, the Commission receives
information through its Internet Web site through forms reporting on
product-related injuries or incidents.
From these sources, the Commission staff selects cases of interest
for further investigation by face-to-face or telephone interviews with
persons who witnessed or were injured in incidents involving consumer
products. On-site investigations are usually made in cases where the
Commission staff needs photographs of the incident site, the product
involved, or detailed information about the incident. This information
can come from face-to-face interviews with persons who were injured or
who witnessed the incident, as well as contact with state and local
officials, including police, coroners and fire investigators, and
others with knowledge of the incident.
The Commission uses this information to support development and
improvement of voluntary standards, rulemaking proceedings, information
and education campaigns, and administrative and judicial proceedings
for enforcement of the statutes, standards, and regulations
administered by the Commission. These safety efforts are vitally
important to help make consumer products safer and to remove unsafe
products from the channels of distribution and from consumers' homes.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approved the collection
of information concerning product-related injuries under control number
3041-0029. OMB's most recent extension of approval will expire on
January 31, 2009. The Commission now proposes to request an extension
of approval of this collection of information.
The Commission also operates a surveillance system known as the
National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) that provides
timely data on consumer product-related injuries treated in a
statistically valid sample from approximately 100 hospital emergency
departments, as well as childhood poisonings in the U.S. The NEISS
system has been in operation since 1971. The Commission previously has
not included NEISS reports under the product-related injuries
collection of information because the information obtained from
hospital databases are obtained directly through CPSC employees and/or
CPSC contractors, and does not involve the solicitation of any
information from any individuals. The CPSC employee or contractor
collects emergency department records for review which are then coded.
The PRA exempts facts or opinions obtained through direct observation
by an employee or agent of the sponsoring agency. 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(3).
However, because in addition to the reports themselves, further
information may need to be obtained which may result in telephone and/
or face-to-face communications with individuals, the proposed
collection of information under the follow-up activities for product-
related injuries now includes the burden hours per year for the NEISS
system in addition to the other follow-up activities conducted by the
Commission.
B. Estimated Burden
The NEISS system collects information on consumer-product related
injuries from approximately 100 hospitals in the United States.
Respondents to NEISS include hospitals that directly report information
to NEISS, and hospitals that allow access to a CPSC contractor who
collects the data. In FY2008, there were 157 NEISS respondents (total
hospitals and CPSC contractors). These NEISS respondents reviewed an
estimated 3.4 million emergency department records and reported 371,507
consumer product-related injuries and 5,030 childhood poisoning-related
injuries. Based on FY2008 data, the total burden hours to respondents
are estimated to be 41,497 hours. The average burden hour per hospital
is 415 hours. However, the total burden hour on each hospital varies by
the size (small or large) and location (rural or metropolitan) of the
hospital. The smallest hospital reported less than 200 cases with a
burden of approximately 100 hours, while the largest hospital reported
over 16,000 cases with a burden of about 1,300 hours.
The total costs to NEISS respondents based on FY2008 data are
estimated to be $1.5 million per year. NEISS respondents enter into
contracts with CPSC and are compensated for these costs. The average
cost per respondent is estimated to be about $15,000. The average cost
per burden hour is estimated to be $36 per hour (including wages and
overhead) (Bureau of Labor Statistics, June 2009, Total Compensation
Civilian workers,
[[Page 62754]]
Hospitals). However, the actual cost to each respondent varies due to
the type of respondent (hospital versus CPSC contractor), size of
hospital, and regional differences in wages and overhead. Therefore,
the actual annual cost for any given respondent may vary between $2,600
at a small rural hospital and $75,000 at a large metropolitan hospital
which are compensated by the CPSC.
The Commission staff also obtains information about incidents
involving consumer products from approximately 17,415 persons annually.
The staff conducts face-to-face interviews at incident sites with
approximately 915 persons each year. On average, an on-site interview
takes approximately 5 hours. The staff will also conduct approximately
3,500 in-depth investigations by telephone. Each in-depth telephone
investigation requires approximately 20 minutes. Additionally, the
Commission's hotline staff interviews approximately 4,000 persons each
year about incidents involving selected consumer products. These
interviews take an average of 10 minutes each. Each year, the
Commission also receives information from about 9,000 persons who
complete forms requesting information about product-related incidents
or injuries. These forms appear on the Commission's Internet Web site,
http:www.cpsc.gov, and are printed in the Consumer Product Safety
Review and other Commission publications. The staff estimates that
completion of a form takes about 12 minutes.
The Commission staff estimates that this collection of information
imposes a total annual burden of 7,724 hours on all respondents: 4,118
hours for face-to-face interviews; 1,155 hours for in-depth telephone
interviews; 661 hours for responses to Hotline interviews; and 1,790
hours for completion of written forms.
The Commission staff estimates the value of the time of respondents
to this collection of information at $29.31 per hour (Bureau of Labor
Statistics, June 2009, Total Compensation, All workers). At this
valuation, the estimated annual cost to the public of this information
collection will be approximately $226,390.
The annual cost to the Federal government for this collection of
information is estimated to be approximately $6.4 million per year.
This estimate includes $1.5 million in compensation to NEISS
respondents. The estimate also includes approximately $4.9 million for
354 professional staff months to oversee NEISS operation, prepare
questionnaires, interviewer guidelines, and other instruments and
instructions used to collect the information, conduct face-to-face and
telephone interviews; and evaluate responses obtained from interviews
and completed forms. Each staff month is estimated to cost the
Commission approximately $13,859. This is based on an average wage rate
of $55.97 (the equivalent of a GS-14 Step 5 employee) with an addition
30 percent added for benefits (Bureau of Labor Statistics, June 2009,
percentage total benefits for all civilian management, professional,
and related employees).
C. Request for Comments
The Commission solicits written comments from all interested
persons about the proposed collection of information. The Commission
specifically solicits information relevant to the following topics:
Whether the collection of information described above is
necessary for the proper performance of the Commission's functions,
including whether the information would have practical utility;
Whether the estimated burden of the proposed collection of
information is accurate;
Whether the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected could be enhanced; and
Whether the burden imposed by the collection of
information could be minimized by use of automated, electronic or other
technological collection techniques, or other forms of information
technology.
Dated: November 24, 2009.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. E9-28661 Filed 11-30-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P